NO. 08-0172

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

TEXAS COMPTROLLER OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS

Petitioner, v.

ATTORNEY GENERAL QF TEXAS AND THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS, LTD.,

Respondents.

On Petition for Review from the Third Court of Appeals at Austin, Texas

AMICI CURIAE BRIEF OF FREEDOM OF INFORMATION FOUNDATION OF TEXAS AND REPORTERS COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS IN SUPPORT OF RESPONDENTS

JOSEPH R. LARSEN State Bar No. 11955425 SEDGWICK, DETERT, MORAN & ARNOLD, LLP Suite 2300 1111 Bagby Houston, TX 77002 Telephone: (832) 426-7020 Facsimile: (832) 426-7009

ATTORNEYS FOR THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION FOUNDATION OF TEXAS AND REPORTERS COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS TABLE OF CONTENTS

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ...... iii

INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE ...... 1

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT ...... 2

BACKGROUND FACTS ...... 3

ARGUMENT & AUTHORITY ...... 3

A public employee's birth date is not excepted from disclosure by the privacy exception to the Texas Public Information Act and the privacy of intrusion on seclusion should not be expanded to include the publishing of dates of birth. Further, withholding date of birth information from release under the Public Information Act will critically undermine the ability of Texas citizens to properly monitor the functioning of Texas governmental bodies.

SUMM"ARY AND CONCLUSION ...... _ ...... 11

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ...... 13

11 TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

FEDERAL CASES

PAGE Billings v. Atkinson, 489 S.W.2d 858 (Tex. 1973) ...... 9

Cain v. Hearst, 878 S.W.2d 577 (Tex. 1994) ...... 10

City ofGarland v. The Dallas Morning News, 22 S.W.3d 351 (Tex. 2000) ...... 11

Graffv. Beard, 858 S.W.2d 918 (Tex. 1993) ...... 6,7

Industrial Found. ofthe South v. Texas Industrial Accident Board, 540 S.W.2d 668 (Tex. 1976) ...... 4,5,8,9,10

Transportation Ins. Co. v. Maksyn, 580 S. W.2d 334 (Tex. 1979) ...... 8

Valenzuela v. Aquino, 853 S.W.2d 512 (Tex. 1993) ...... 4,9

STATE STATUTES

TEx. GOy'T CODE § 552.024 ...... 7

TEX. GOy'T CODE § 552.117 ...... 7

. TEx. GOy'T CODE § 552.136 ...... 7

TEx. GOy'TCODE § 552.147 ...... ;...... 7

111 NO. 08-0172

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

TEXAS COMPTROLLER OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS

Petitioner,

v.

ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS AND THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS, LTD.,

Respondents.

On Petition for Review from the Third Court of Appeals at Austin, Texas

AMICI CURIAE BRIEF OF FREEDOM OF INFORMATION FOUNDATION OF TEXAS AND REPORTERS COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS IN SUPPORT OF RESPONDENTS

The Freedom ofInformation Foundation of Texas and Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press present this amici curiae brief and would show the Court as follows:

INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE

The Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas ("FOIFT") is a non-profit

Texas based organization representing a broad spectrum of Texas citizens concerned

1 about the free flow of infonnation and dedicated to open government. Since its founding in 1978, its mission has been to serve as a statewide clearinghouse of infonnation on open government and First Amendment issues and to take action in the public interest on open government and First Amendment problems. FOIFT has not received nor will receive any fee for preparing this brief.

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press ("RCFP") is an unincorporated association of reporters and editors which works to defend First

Amendment rights and freedom of infonnation interests of the news media. RCFP has

provided representation, guidance and research in First Amendment litigation since

1970.

RCFP is an unincorporated association that has no parent and issues no stock.

RCFP has not received nor will receive any fee for preparing this brief

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT

The Comptroller's argument that dates of birth of employees of governmental

bodies should be withheld to protect their privacy falls short of the mark because dates

of birth are not recognized as a privacy interest under the common law. Specifically,

the tort of intrusion on seclusion, the only tort the Comptroller argues applies in this

case, simply does not apply to release of infonnation under Texas Supreme Court

precedent. Expanding this tort to include release of birth date infonnation is not

supported by good policy considerations, and the results of such an expansion of the

2 common law would change the nature of the tort under Texas law and unwisely extend its reach not only regarding the Public Information Act but as to the use of such an expanded tort by the plaintiffs' bar. The Public Information Act is to be interpreted liberally to provide for release of information and the Court should accordingly strictly limit any confidentiality provision or judicial decision that would prevent disclosure of public information. Date of birth information is vitally important to monitoring the actions of public officers and their employees.

BACKGROUND FACTS

FOIFT and RCFP adopt The Dallas Morning News' (" The News") statement of the facts in this matter.

ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITY

Respondents Attorney General and The News have done a top drawer job in their

briefs to the Court. They have correctly pointed out a number of shortcomings on the

Comptroller'S positions in this matter, not least of which is that the Comptroller is

making an argument on appeal that it did not make before the trial court. Their papers

also make clear that no existing case law or statute supports withholding release of

, birth dates as an invasion of privacy, a point the Comptroller appears to concede.

Respondents have also asked the Court to take note of the legislature'S failure to pass a

statute that would have given the Comptroller the specific relief that she now seeks

before this Court. The Amici would add the below additional analysis and discussion

3 regarding the unworkability and imprudence of expanding the common law tort of intrusion on seclusion to prevent publication of dates of birth. The Amici would also add argument and authority on the importance of maintaining access to dates of birth as necessary to proper functioning of the Texas Public Information Act, which, by its own terms, is to be liberally interpreted to allow for release of information.

While numerous privacy theories have been relied upon by the Comptroller at various points in the history ofthis case, it is clear from her briefs that she is asking this

Court to extend the holding in Industrial Foundation ofthe South v. Texas Industrial

Accident Board, 540 S.W.2d 668 (Tex. 1976) to prevent release ofthe dates of birth of

governmental employees through (1) expanding the judicial decisions recognized as

affecting release of information pursuant to the PIA to include the privacy interest of

freedom from intrusion on seclusion, and (2) expanding the tort of intrusion upon

seclusion to include publication of birth dates.

However, expanding intrusion upon seclusion to cover publication of birth dates

will not only prevent persons from obtaining this information under the PIA, but will

dramatically expand this tort to permit privacy tort claims that will not be easily

distinguished from this case. The intrusion upon seclusion tort requires proof of (1) an

intentional intrusion, physical or otherwise, upon another's solitude, seclusion, or

private affairs or concerns, and (2) the intrusion being highly offensive to a reasonable

person. Valenzuela v. Aquino, 853 S.W.2d 512,513 (Tex. 1993).

4 An inescapable fact about birth dates is that everybody has one. It would not be surprising that, among the various offices where the nearly 145,000 state employees with date of birth information on file work, some number celebrate the birthdays ofthe employees by means of office cake or a card. Rather than finding this recognition offensive, most people feel some level of warm feeling about it. Indeed, most people find nothing offensive at all about others knowing their date of birth, although no doubt everybody finds identity theft to be offensive and a clear invasion of privacy. However, it is not possible to simply equate the two, even if birth dates may assist in the latter.

As frequently mentioned in the Comptroller's brief, a governmental employee's name is also necessary to identifY theft. Yet, no one would seriously propose making release of people's names a cause of action for intrusion upon seclusion.

Changing the common law to make release of dates of birth a matter subject to the tort of intrusion upon seclusion makes any employer who celebrates employee birthdays potentially subject to the tort. The information of the month and date along with widely known knowledge regarding the age of fellow employees would at least

arguably put these celebrations within the expanded tort urged by the comptroller.

As opposed to the information at issue in Industrial Found. o/the South v. Texas

Indus. Accident Board, 540 S.W.2d 668 (Tex. 1976), which contained health care

records that some persons may have and others may not, and that were collected by the

governmental body as a result of work accidents, the date of birth records at issue in

5 this case are on file for every single employee of the state of Texas and its subdivisions and are usually right on the application for employment. This information is also generally obtained in commercial activities by banks or other vendors or service providers as well as most if not all private employers. As opposed to information that a prospective employee has cancer or multiple sclerosis or AIDS, for example, which may be denied to any employer, including the government, a prospective employee who

claimed release of his date of birth was protected by his right of privacy would quickly

be denied employment.

The fervency with which the Comptroller has made her arguments appear to have

blinded her to their broader implications. However, the Court should take a clear-eyed

view of the ramifications of expanding the tort of intrusion upon seclusion to include

release of date of birth information. The Comptroller is not only asking this Court to

the broadly restrict dates of birth from release under the Public Information Act, but

necessarily to expand the tort to affirmatively allow for a tort cause ofaction for release

of birth date information and therefore to set jurisprudence for the tort bar in this state.

However, the Comptroller has shown the Court no basis for such an extension, such as

has preceded other developments in the common law. See, e.g., Graffv. Beard, 858

S. W.2d 918 (Tex. 1993). The Comptroller has never even hinted that she has

that public employees are at greater risk of identity theft in general or even that anyone

public employee has suffered identity theft, and, in fact, studies have shown that the

6 majority of identity theft involves theft by relatives or close friends. The Comptroller does not even give the Court an example of a non-media Public Information Act request for dates of birth. And the Comptroller has touched on none ofthe factors outlined in

GrajJfor expanding the common law.

The Comptroller has only shown the Court generally that identity theft is a problem, which is obviously a given. That fact is underscored by the legislation on the books attempting to deal with the larger issue of identity theft and misuse of personal information. Some of this legislation has taken the form of making specific information confidential for purposes of the Public Information Act, for example, Tex. Gov't Code

§ 552.136 (credit card numbers); § 552.117 (addresses, telephone numbers, social

security numbers and personal family information of peace officers); § 552.147 (social

security numbers generally). Indeed, the Public Information Act gives all public

employees the choice as to whether to make his or her address and phone number

available to the public. § 552.024. However, the legislature has not seen fit to make

confidential dates of birth, and it is fully aware of the current law allowing their release.

Indeed, the legislature has specifically considered doing so and has declined to enact

such a law. This also militates strongly against an expansion ofthe common law. In an

analogous case, the Court refused to extend the common law with this principle in

mind. Graff, 858 S.W.2d at 919. ("We think it significant in appraising Beard's

request to recognize common-law social host liability that the legislature has considered

7 and declined to create such a duty."); see also Transportation Ins. Co. v. Maksyn, 580

S.W.2d 334,338 (Tex. 1979)(the deletion of a provision of a pending bill discloses the legislative intent to reject the proposal and courts should be slow to put back that which the legislature has rejected).

Further, whereas Industrial Foundation adopted the common law tort of public disclosure of private facts as already written in the Restatement of and held this tort applied to information subject to the Texas Public Information Act, the Comptroller is asking the Court to broadly extend the tort of intrusion upon seclusion. The

Industrial Foundation factors incorporating the "public disclosure of private facts" tort works well with regard to whether information held by a governmental body is entitled to protection as opposed to the broad policy pronouncement the Comptroller asks the

Court to make through expansion ofthe tort of intrusion upon seclusion. Indeed, this

Court in Industrial Foundation specifically recognized that the "interest asserted by

[the governmental body] ... most closely resembles the interest defined by Prosser as

freedom from public disclosure of embarrassing private facts." Id at 682,

The reasons for this are clear from even a brief examination of the two torts--

only the tort of public disclosure of embarrassing private facts involves publication of

information. The Industrial Foundation Court explained, given a requester's right to

use information freely once obtained, that when a governmental body "makes

information in its files available for public inspection, the information is sufficiently

8 'publicized' to invoke the protection accorded such matters by the tort law." Id. at

684.

However, the privacy right protected by the tort of intrusion upon seclusion does not require publication at all, but is invoked by the intrusion itself. The seminal Texas case of Billings v. Atkinson, 489 S.W.2d 858 (Tex. 1973) involved a wiretap where no evidence of publication ofthe information was shown or required, merely listening in on the telephone conferences was enough. In Valenzuela, the issue was whether

picketing outside plaintiffs' home constituted intrusion on seclusion, and no personal

information of plaintiffs even appears to have been at issue. Accordingly, the tort of

intrusion upon seclusion is inappropriate as a decision criteria regarding release of

public information. This is further underscored by the fact that, when the Industrial

Foundation Court carefully crafted its test, it emphasized that even if the information at

issue met the first prong of the test, that it contain "highly intimate or embarrassing

facts about a person's private affairs," it must also be of no "legitimate concern to the

public." This protection, in addition to coming straight from the Restatement (Second)

of Torts, is consistent with the basic mandate by the legislature that the Public

Information Act must be construed liberally in favor of release of information. The tort of intrusion on seclusion has no such protection. The analysis of this

Court in holding that there is no "" invasion of privacy in Texas is relevant

here not only because it dealt with another specie of invasion of privacy, but because

9 the Court declined to extend the common law to recognize false light not only because it effectively duplicated the torts oflibel and slander, but also because it did not include the constitutional and procedural safeguards for freedom of speech that inhere to a claim. See Cain v. Hearst, 878 S.W.2d 577,580-83 (Tex. 1994). In the instant case, expansion of the tort of intrusion on seclusion to include publication of information, birth dates or otherwise, would not only be redundant of the tort of wrongful publicity of private facts, but would not include the protections and limitations for use of private information where there is a legitimate public concern, as set out by

Industrial Foundation and the Restatement.

It is fairly apparent that the Comptroller abandoned her claim under Industrial

Foundation because there is no question that dates of birth provide a valuable piece of information for monitoring the activities of our governmental bodies and their

employees and are therefore of legitimate public concern. While the dates of birth themselves have no real significance, their value to the public is to be able to

specifically identity the public employee in question. This information is particularly

valuable in distinguishing between governmental employees with the same first and last

names of which there are approximately 2,000 state employees. Using dates of birth,

The Dallas Morning News documented the Dallas Independent School District had

hired employees with criminal records and that the state had licensed convicted felons

as nurses. The News also identified 266 Texas Youth Commission employees with

10 criminal backgrounds. See http://www.dallasnews.comlsharedcontent/dws/dn/ latestnews/stories/050709dnprodateofbirth.3fcf743.html. Not having this information will prevent the press from doing some stories involving governmental employees out of concern they have the wrong person, and valuable information the public needs to be an effective citizenry and electorate will go unpublished.

Underlying all of these considerations is the fact that the Public Information Act mandates a liberal construction to implement the policy of providing the public with access at all times to "complete information about the affairs of government and the official acts of public officials and their employees." City of Garland v. The Dallas

Morning News, 22 S.W.3d351, 355-56 (Tex. 2000)(emphasisadded). Of course, this presupposes that one can identify these public officials and their employees to begin with.

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION

The Freedom ofInformation Foundation of Texas and Reporters Committee for

the Freedom of the Press urge this Court to reject the Comptroller's invitation to

expand the common law tort of intrusion on seclusion as a mechanism to zero in on

publication of birth dates as unwise, unworkable and inconsistent with the Court's own

prior jurisprudence. Caution in expanding the common law of the State of Texas is a

conservative principle. Access to information that aids the American people in

monitoring their public officials and employees is a conservative principal that is

11 fundamentally important to preserving our American form of limited government.

Ronald Reagan once famously said "trust but verifY." While that statement was with regard to verification of nuclear arms reduction, it applies equally to the relationship of

Texans to their public officials and employees. The legislature has given Texas a strong

Public Information Act. We ask this Court to rule consistently with its own prior jurisprudence in keeping it so.

Respectfully submitted this /o;t.!Laay of January, 2010.

SEDGWICK DETERT, MORAN & ARNOLD LLP 72- .. Jo arsen S te Bar No. 11955425 1111 Bagby St., Suite 2300 Houston, Texas 77002 Telephone No.: (832) 426.7000 Facsimile No.: (832) 426.7009

ATTORNEYS FOR THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION FOUNDATION OF TEXAS AND REPORTERS COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS OF COUNSEL: Lucy A. Dalglish Gregg P. Leslie THE REPORTERS COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS 1101 Wilson Blvd., Suite 1100 Arlington, VA 22209 Telephone No.: (703) 807-2100

12 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing was served on all counsel of record listed below in accordance with Rule 9.5(c) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure via U.S. First Class Mail and/or facsimile on this the )¢day of January, 2010 as follows:

Mr. Jack Hohengarten Deputy Division Chief Financial Litigation Division P. O. Box 12548 Austin, Texas 78711-2548 Counsel for Petitioner Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts

Ms. Brenda Loudermilk Chief, Open Records Litigation Section Office of the Attorney General P. O. Box 12548 Austin, Texas 78711-2548 Trial and Appellate Counsel for Respondent Attorney General of Texas

Mr. Paul C. Watler Jackson Walker L.L.P. 901 Main Street, Suite 6000 Dallas, Texas 75202 Attorneys for Respondent/Cross Petitioner The Dallas Morning News

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